Jeremy Tambling Hong Kong University Press The University of Hong Kong Pokfulam Road Hong Kong www.hkupress.org © 2003 Hong Kong University Press Hardback edition first published 2003 Paperback edition first published 2003, reprinted 2006 ISBN 978-962-209-588-5 (Hardback) ISBN 978-962-209-589-2 (Paperback) All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed and bound by Condor Production Ltd., Hong Kong, China Contents Series Preface vii Preface x 1 Introduction: Approaching the Film 1 2 Happy Together and Allegory 9 3 Contexts: Why Buenos Aires? 2 4 Contexts: The Road Movie 33 5 Reading the Film 39 6 Happy Together and Homosexuality 65 7 Happy Together, Hong Kong and Melancholy 77 8 Epilogue: Happy Together and In the Mood for Love 93 vi CONTENTS Notes 105 Filmography 115 Bibliography 119 1 Introduction: Approaching the Film In May 1997, just before Hong Kong passed from British colonial rule to the People’s Republic of China — the event of June 30 which turned the colony into an S.A.R. (Special Administrative Region) — Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai released the film Happy Together (春光乍洩). Wong Kar-wai was born in Shanghai in 1958 but he was brought up in Hong Kong and began film-making — if a beginning can be located at this point without being arbitrary about his previous work on films — with As Tears Go By (1988). This was a fast-paced gangland movie set in Kowloon which is frequently compared in plot with Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streets (1973). It portrayed a gangster (Andy Lau) caught between the demands of his partner, Fly (Jacky Cheung), and his girlfriend (Maggie Cheung). As such, it can be seen as remaking a Hollywood formula, where the focus is on a male character proving his masculinity.1 Wong Kar-wai’s second and more interesting film was Days of Being Wild (1990). Again, just as in As Tears Go By, the movie is 2 WONG KAR-WAI’s HAPPY TOGETHER set in Hong Kong and takes place in 1960. Capturing a moment gone or going by seems not only crucial to the film’s director, but also to Yuddy (Leslie Cheung), the hero of the film who says to Maggie Cheung when she has told him the time, ‘Because of you I’ll remember this minute. From now on we’ve been friends for one minute.’ The minute gains value because of the person, though the person may not last in the other’s affection. Yuddy seems fully in control as shown most clearly in his relationships with his girlfriends (Maggie Cheung and Carina Lau) and the way in which he is the idol of his friend Zeb (Jacky Cheung). He is, however, consumed with a desire to know his mother who left him. Yuddy has been brought up by Rebecca (Rebecca Pan) who is about to emigrate to the USA in the same way that his first girlfriend is from Macau and seems likely to return there. Yuddy’s sense of not having a secure place is increased when he journeys to the Philippines to find his mother. His quest ends in failure when she refuses to see him — meaning that the most important woman in his life refuses to validate him — and he dies at the hands of Filipino gangsters after having been robbed by a Filipina prostitute. The Philippines in this film has something of the quality of a mythical Wild West. This was the first Wong Kar-wai film that Australian photographer Chris Doyle worked on, relying mostly on a hand-held camera and following Wong Kar-wai in his technique of filming open-ended improvisations. Doyle has been associated with the director’s films, except for Fallen Angels, ever since. Since Wong Kar-wai can hardly be said to work with a prewritten script — he films and then constructs the film largely on the cutting-room floor — collaboration, especially with Doyle, is essential in the making of his films. His third film, Ashes of Time (1994), was derived from the martial-arts genre and set in mainland China but, again, had something of a western flavour to it. It compared two swordsmen, Ouyang Fang (Malevolent West) and Huang Yaoshi (Sinister East) INTRODUCTION: APPROACHING THE FILM 3 and their parallel lives, although more time in the film is devoted to Ouyang Fang, the ascetic figure who wants to remember, as opposed to the womanizing Huang Yaoshi, a swordsman who wants to forget. Could these names be allegories for East and West, as these two bodies of geopolitical power impact on Hong Kong? I shall discuss this notion of allegory in the following chapter. The swordsmen were played by Leslie Cheung and Tony Leung Ka-fai. One of the film’s heroes is the Blind Swordsman (Tony Leung Chiu-wai, the star of Happy Together) and another is the Shoeless Swordsman, Hong Qi (Jacky Cheung) — both figures of deprivation. Another kind of figure is the ambiguous character Murong Yang who is also Murong Yin (Brigitte Lin), first appearing in the movie in men’s clothes. Maggie Cheung played the role of the woman that Ouyang Fang was in love with — but he is unable to tell her and she ends up marrying his brother — and Carina Lau played Peach Blossom, the wife of the Blind Swordsman who is separated from him by distance, while Charlie Yeung played a peasant girl possessing only a basket of eggs who is looking for a swordsman to help her avenge her brother’s death. In this film all identities and both genders substitute inadequately for each other, with a sense that no single and complete identity can be maintained, certainly no identity that claims to be masculine and complete in itself. Wong Kar-wai achieved international renown with Chungking Express (1994), drawn in plot and inspiration from the Japanese postmodernist writer Murakami Haruki. It starred Brigitte Lin, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Tony Leung Chiu-wai and Faye Wong. The two men play policemen whose troubles lie with their love lives, and who therefore give a feeling of melancholia to the film. The violence is associated with the woman — in this case, Brigitte Lin. The motif of the lovelorn policeman follows Days of Being Wild where Tide (Andy Lau) was in love with the first of Yuddy’s girlfriends (Maggie Cheung) who does not reciprocate, until, possibly, at the end when it is too late. There is a sequence in which a phone rings in a 4 WONG KAR-WAI’s HAPPY TOGETHER telephone booth on what used to be Tide’s beat, recalling the words of a famous song: ‘A telephone that rings, but who’s to answer?’ Earlier in the film, Tide tells Yuddy’s girlfriend to call him, but when the phone rings he has already left behind the police and Hong Kong and gone to sea (he appears in the Philippines section of the film). Chungking Express’s less comic successor, Fallen Angels (1995), like Ashes of Time, was another film about a hired killer (Leon Lai) and his female agent (Michele Reis) who loves him. However, because she has rarely seen him, she has to work out his identity by going through the sacks of rubbish he leaves at his apartment. These lives are crisscrossed by that of the ex-convict, He Zhiwu (Takeshi Kaneshiro), who is falling in love for the first time with Charlie Yeung. Another girlfriend, Baby (Karen Mok), also complicates the killer’s arrangements, contributing to his death while he carries out one last shooting. Both of these last two films were set in 1990s Hong Kong, and both tried, through quick cutting and slicing through different narratives, to depict the city’s urban space at the point when it could be most mythicized as the story of a successful city whose colonial days, obviously irrelevant to it, were just disappearing. Both films have something of a celebratory feeling within them. Fallen Angels, with its characteristic way of contorting images to make faces grotesque and isolating them by shooting with an ultra-wide-angle lens, makes frequent references to Chungking Express — most notably with the fast-food restaurant Midnight Express, fast food with a concentration on waste, and rubbish bags. Happy Together makes a fresh start by not looking back to Wong Kar-wai’s previous films. It does not have a double plot. Unlike Ashes of Time, it does not have to be seen at least twice before an initial understanding of it can take place. It is pared to the bone with a cast of barely more than three people. Sections of film which were to include the pop star Shirley Kwan were excised from it, so that the film features no women at all. As his second INTRODUCTION: APPROACHING THE FILM 5 film set wholly outside Hong Kong,Happy Together won for Wong Kar-wai the Award for Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival that year, the first time a Hong Kong director received the award. The film was nominated for the Palm d’Or as well. Since Happy Together, Wong has continued with In the Mood for Love (2000), set in Hong Kong of the 1960s (returning to something of Days of Being Wild), which I wish to compare with Happy Together at the end of this book.
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